Want this question answered?
Morlocks have dull gray skin and red eyes. They are smaller and weaker than humans.
The Morlocks' ability to use tools and plan their attacks on the Time Traveler, as mentioned in the passage, suggests a level of intelligence comparable to humans. Additionally, their ability to strategize and adapt their behavior to lock the Time Traveler in the chamber indicates a higher cognitive capacity.
The Morlocks are Troglodyte-like creatures who live mostly underground .
The Time Machine By H.G.Wells
The time machine is taken by the morlocks into the black sphinx. By the time the Traveller arrives in the year 802,701 AD, humans have divded into two species: the fun loving, simple minded, no care Eloi; and, the brutal, techno-puppets the Morlocks. The Morlocks are mechanics in the simplest sense of the word. They have lost all humanity and have simply become part of the machines they keep functioning. They are drawn to things mechanical, and when they find the Traveller's time machine, like rodents attracted to shiney items, they take it back to their lair. There is no malice in it, just action; simple, mindless, action.
The Eloi and the Morlocks are characters from the science fiction novel "The Time Machine" written by H.G. Wells. The Eloi are a peaceful, childlike species living on the surface, while the Morlocks are a subterranean and more sinister group. The protagonist of the story encounters both civilizations during his time-traveling adventures.
The time machine
Eloi and Morlocks appear in H.G. Wells' novel "The Time Machine." The Eloi are a peaceful, childlike people who live above ground, while the Morlocks are underground-dwelling, subterranean creatures who prey on the Eloi. The novel explores themes of class division and evolution.
The cannibalistic beasts in HG Wells' book "The Time Machine" are called Morlocks. They are a species that evolved underground in the distant future and prey on the Eloi, another species that lives above ground.
By going back in time and raping Abraham Lincoln with a screwdriver.
In H.G. Wells's "The Time Machine," the Time Traveller encounters the Morlocks, who are described as having sensitive, whip-like antennae that they use to perceive their surroundings. The antennae play a role in highlighting the Morlocks' divergent evolutionary path and their predatory nature.
He is referred to only as The Time Traveller and by personal pronouns. I cannot fathom out why Wells made the all-important lead character anonymous. It could not have been to merely add suspense, which the tale has enough touches of the unknown to begin with... it does not grok.